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The Simple Mobility Routine That Takes 5 Minutes
Fitness & Sports

The Simple Mobility Routine That Takes 5 Minutes

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By Jaxson Reed
5 June 2026 3 Min Read
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You don’t need an hour-long yoga class to unlock stiff joints—a targeted 5 minute mobility routine can transform your movement quality and slash injury risk.

Every athlete—from desk jockey to gym rat—has tight hips, frozen shoulders, and stiff ankles. Ignoring them is a slow ticket to pain.

This isn’t about stretching. It’s about active control through full ranges of motion.

You’ll hit the three most neglected areas: hips, shoulders, and ankles. No fluff, just results.

5 minute mobility routine — illustration 1
5 minute mobility routine — illustration 1

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Unlock Your Hips in 90 Seconds
    • Deep Hip Flexor Release
  • Shoulder CARs: Control Your Range
    • Wall Slides for Scapular Control
  • Ankle Drops: The Forgotten Joint
    • Ankle Circles for Range
  • The 5 minute mobility routine: Quick Daily Sequence

Unlock Your Hips in 90 Seconds

Your hips are the powerhouse of every squat, lunge, and sprint. But sitting all day locks them into flexion.

You lose extension and rotation, setting you up for lower back pain and knee strain.

Start with hip CARs (controlled articular rotations). Stand on one leg, lift the other knee to 90 degrees, and slowly circle the thigh outward.

Keep your torso still and go for maximum range, not speed. Five reps each direction per side.

Deep Hip Flexor Release

Kneel on a pad with one leg up at 90 degrees. Squeeze your glute on the kneeling leg and lean forward slightly.

Feel the stretch in the front of the hip. Hold for 30 seconds, then switch sides.

This opens the hip flexors tight from sitting.

Combine these two moves and you’ve addressed 80% of hip restrictions. Do them before any squat session for better depth and stability.

Shoulder CARs: Control Your Range

Shoulder injuries are epidemic in lifters and overhead athletes. The culprit is loss of rotational control in the socket.

You need to own your end ranges, not just passively stretch them.

Stand with arms at sides. Slowly raise one arm forward and overhead, then rotate the palm back and lower it behind you like a back scratch.

Reverse the motion, going as far as possible without pain. Five reps each arm.

Wall Slides for Scapular Control

Stand with back against a wall, arms bent at 90 degrees, elbows and wrists touching the wall. Slide your arms overhead while maintaining contact.

Keep ribs down and stop when elbows peel off. Do 10 reps.

This forces shoulder flexion with proper scapular upward rotation.

These two drills restore overhead mobility and prevent impingement. For a comprehensive mobility routine, include them daily.

Ankle Drops: The Forgotten Joint

Ankle stiffness ruins squats, deadlifts, and runs. Limited dorsiflexion forces your knees and hips to compensate.

You lose depth and risk meniscus tears.

Stand facing a wall, foot about four inches away. Keep heel flat on ground and drive your knee toward the wall.

Don't let the heel rise. Hold the deepest point for two seconds, then return.

Ten reps each side.

Ankle Circles for Range

Sit on a chair, lift one foot, and circle the ankle slowly in both directions. 10 circles each way.

This lubricates the joint and awakens proprioception.

Do this before any leg day. You’ll feel the difference in your squat depth immediately.

The 5 minute mobility routine: Quick Daily Sequence

No excuses. Here’s the exact flow for your routine:

  • Hip CARs: 90 seconds (45 each side)
  • Deep Hip Flexor Release: 60 seconds (30 each side)
  • Shoulder CARs: 90 seconds (45 each arm)
  • Wall Slides: 30 seconds
  • Ankle Drops: 60 seconds (30 each side)
  • Ankle Circles: 30 seconds

That's five minutes. Perform this routine every day—before workouts, after work, or as a morning reset.

Consistency beats intensity here.

Spend five minutes on this mobility routine today. Your joints will thank you tomorrow.

For more performance tips, check out our Fitness & Sports archive.

Want to dive deeper? Read about mobility’s impact on injury prevention or additional hip mobility strategies from Healthline.

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Tags:

ankle mobilityhip mobilityinjury preventionmobilityshoulder health
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Author

Jaxson Reed

Jaxson Reed is a 30-year-old performance coach training out of a stripped-down gym in Austin, Texas. He strips away fluff—if your squat depth is off by an inch, he calls it. On this blog, he breaks down strength programming and recovery tactics for athletes who train with real intent. You won't find motivational quotes here, just the hard truth on form and recovery.

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